42 ^ ^ A,A A, A ^ A A A It ^ Was CLEOPATRATRA /lat--footed? Cleopatra was chock full of pepper- At least she is famed for her scandals. But was she indeed a high-stepper? . How come? She wore flat-footed sandals! It spoils a beautiful picture to think of Cleopatra as limping along with broken- down arches; but with the shoes she wore, how could it have been otherwise? Per- haps it was this pedal insufficien y that ga ve rise to her preference for beIng car- ried around in mattresses. Be that as it may, it's remarkable how little ordinary shoes have advanced on the models of four thousand years ago. The average New Yorker still wears flat- footed shoes-and these frequently bear a further resemblance to the styles of antiquity in being made of paper. But similarity ceases in the case of the Arch Preserver. The Arch Preserver Shoe is really m Ide to fit the sole of the foot. You don't have to have bad feet to wear them. They preserve good feet-that's where they get their n me. . And in th se blistering days when City sIdewalks SIZ- zle like the sands of the S.lhara you'll find as much coolness and comfort in Arch Preserver Summer Styles as the ordinarily shod mortal finds in wallo - ing knee-deep in lfalfa or whatever It is that they have in the country. THERE ARE, FR'INST THE PEPI A man's shoe on the Ohto last. In soft, rosy tan or black calfsktn THE RAMESEA An aristocratic soft patent pump for afternoon wear BuREN BROWN, Inc: y V Y y V y v.y y V y y V ON AND OFF THE AVENUE FéMININé FASHIONS Ostrtch Feathers and Nice, Cool Fur-Sports Hats and a Scarf or Two I F OR quite son1e \ P . \ ,\ , t i me, lerrot ; ':, , tf' ruffs 0 f ostrich l-1n . ::; ;r: ::d b : t. -:=\ \ i -1 summer resorts in ;'.-:-- ' ': ')"" E u r 0 p e, but for some reason they have not yet taken hold in this country. Possibly our modest American woman hates the idea of the negligee in connection with her sophisticated summer frocks. 'I'here is a great chance, however, that the women who have got used to the idea abroad this summer will estab- lish this graceful fashion at Palm Beach next winter. Advance fashion wearers may find their ostrich feather boas now at Best & Co. H ATTIE CARNEGIE is now showing a great number of ex- an1ples of the use of that milky pow- der blue that has suddenly taken Paris by storm and is somewhat casually in- vading this country. You will find aU kinds of two-piece crêpe de Chine dresses for late summer wear, some of them accompanied by cloth coats to match, some with jackets of velveteen in a deeper shade, some plain. J UST at the time of the universal epidemic of fur sales, Saks-Fifth Avenue feels inclined to burst forth with the information that it is fea- turing ponyskin (which, with a patent leather finish to the fur, made a late spring appearance in Paris and was definitely heralded for autumn). This may be had in almost any natural color, and, because of its wearing qualities, supersedes the gazelle and the antelopes of last season, which were unbelievably fragile. The ponyskin things are severely tailored, of course, and there is con<;iderable use of suède trImmIngs. Saks also has a great number of fur coats for smal1 children, in pony- skin, light-weight raccoon, squirrel, and muskrat. In the sports department here the THE NEW YORKER f' ,/t '=-- J. ,t'\, (, iF. I;t" . r. ß! . æF' ø ( ' . " I ==. 1& --- I i,"'" " / - " .-.- .i _. :t . A Night at an Inn It it were not so authentically romdntic one might believe in it. There are fireflies There are buggies hitched to the sidewalk. The church steeple, the inn chimneys and the tall elms silhouette against the sky. And the moon hangs just where any scene painter would put it. But believe it or not. the facts re- main. You are fifty miles from town. Larry Siry' s music cannot be re- sisted. You won't want to get up in the morning - and you won't have to. . Goshen I nn welcomes both tran- sient and vacation guests and offers all outdoor sports. American or European plan. For information and advance reservations apply Room 328, 17 East 42nd Street, New York City. Vanderbilt 2.953. GOSHEN INN GOSHEN, NEW YORK Under M anagemenl- The Kellogg Service. Inc. r - T T T T T T ..,.. T T T T T """ T T T ..,.. T Summer Serenity : wIth a SAVELl , ! if ermanent j , '", ,." ',,:j- .,J"." . j . . J ..;,..........,... ,>..:, ''i!, ''' .;r....t: .:.;-... j -":, ...... Warm weather com- fort and feminine charm start with a perfect coiffure. A Save 1 i Permanent Wave puts your hair in the mood for the mode of the mo- ment, .,",., ", :---:..-. , f7J';;::>,."",, à ; ',, Expert operators, personally trained by Mr. Saveli. Beauty and scalp treatments by spe- ci a / i s t s. P rice s reasonable. Advice without charge. .. ! 17 W. 48th St. f West olPi/th Ave. ( Open evenings by appointment] Hotel Ambassador., Park Ave. & 51.rt (A R e/rigerated Beauty Sa/on] j t . . . o: p i :n h :e .p:a:a ?: 1 . .' . . ..